Hi. I would like to ask if someone here knows some information about chu nom characters here.
I once saw on an essay that chu nom is based according to some principles and guidelines,so as to form a chu nom character.I hope you can help me on this topic.

Many Chu Nom characters are actually the same as Chinese Hanzi. However, there are many that basically consists of two parts, one that indicates the pronounciation in Vietnamese and the other indicate the meaning.

Johann wrote:
> If that is so,can we combine any chinese characters to form a
> chu nom character? I heard that sometimes,a character led to
> several different interpretations.Can we combine just anything?

No, you can't make new chu nom characters any more than you can make
up new Chinese characters (a lot of Chinese characters are also
combinations of two other Chinese characters). People would have a lot of
difficulty understanding what you were writing.

The "several different interpretations" comes from chu nom never
developing to a point where it was standardized, and the multiple ways of
creating characters, which sometimes led to the same character being created
to write two different words.

Chu Nom was never truly popularized because it was sort of looked down upon, even by Vietnamese themselves, which I personally believe is a shame. Before the French colonized Vietnam, most scholars and government officials still used Chinese Hanzi rather than Chu Nom for writing.

Many Chu Nom characters are actually the same as Chinese Hanzi. However, there are many that basically consists of two parts, one that indicates the pronounciation in Vietnamese and the other indicate the meaning.

Is an ancient writing system of the Vietnamese language. It makes use of Chinese characters coined following the Chinese model. The earliest example of chu Nom dates to the 13th century. It was used almost exclusively by the Vietnamese elites, mostly for recording Vietnamese literature formal writings were, in most cases, not done in Vietnamese, but in classical Chinese. It has now been completely replaced by quoc ngu, a script based on the Latin alphabet.

have you ever been in Vietnam. I am Teochew Vietnamese or Chinese Vietnamese , mate. It is not abolished. it just the Vietnameseb don't use it because it is basically based on Han-Vietnamese language( Chinese characters but they modified in a very unnecessary way). That's why the Vietnamese referred to Han-Vietnamese rather than Chu Nom

they still practice in Vietnam and USA especially who study degree of art and literature